Skip to main content

Full text of "Daily Worker 1933-09-27: Vol 10 Iss 232"

See other formats


At eee 8 
3 * 4 
ye 4 


1 “ 
0 N * $ 2 
* n * * 
5 3 S ae ar =e J 
’ > 9 N n a 1 
2 1 5 — 
. 7 f 
= oe : 
eT : 
8 ; ¢ A 
4 . om 
* 8 0 n 7 1 * 
2 1 P - j 
* 
‘ 
— — — — — 
F : 


America’s Only Working a = 
Class Daily Newspaper 


— * 7 _ 


WEATHER. 
Pe hag York: Showers Wed- 


— re es 8 * ei - . 
8 7 * * é 
| FE : | 4 = , 
4 
* 


40 2 


7 


oe 
og OE ESR Re. 1 IS a ee 


3 : 


* 


„ 


* 


* Torgler'sNazi Counsel 


Torgler, Dimitroff, Popof 15 0 N a KI * rig Trial Judg JU 5 
C D. DIMITROFF FROM NAZI COURT 
FOR HIS MILITANT STAND 


e gels 


TO ACT FOR 
DEMANDS 


choo! | 
the 25 
= 3 J Have No Real Counsel,’ He Says When Court { ee i 
= | wen m the ct a Join Ag are Tells Him to Speak Through Lawyer “OF ficials ae 
Aut i : of Pin German N Re ims — and art totes: , , | (Special Cable to the Daily Worker.) | —— 2 
2 5 | | _ ‘LEIPZIG, Sept. 26.—Threats to expel from the court room By FRANK BORICH. - 
suis [George Dimitroff, veteran Bulgarian revolutionist, and co- Secretar-, National Miners Union. 
ode 55 ? % | defendent with Ernst Torgler and two other Communists in (By Telegraph.) 9 
a | ae the Reichstag frame-up arson trial, were made today by the PITTSBURGH, Pa., Sept. 2 
the 5 red - robed presiding judges. Five thousand striking yy 
— Tb ‘| "The action followed Dimitroff’s 0 marching to Clairton, Pa., i 
5 . ee Western Union cars tem een v to cll on ine ig 
; - 2 German * , 
judge the N press. Angered, \ German Communist | Co. to join the miners’ strike, were 


| of prosecuting attorney in railroad- “You have no right to speak! A 
counsel!” 


ing Torgler and the Bulgarian to your to Navi Court | “rhe Carnegie Steel Co. is a b 
To this Dimitroff, who on Saturday 


went Transmit Wire Tom Mann Coming 5 e oo tonne 
t t ted | — e miners’ st. 3 is cores din- 
© 8000 at Meer to Speak Against . e rene 


21 
88827 
ap 
f 


„ 


8 2 


f it 8 


sy! 
NEW YORK—“Our German con- War Thruout U. 8. K 
reren ma Miners eee delegates 
8 | conference of the 
2 dressed to Dr. Wilhelm Buenger, Zu- Vise Delay Prevents! iet, scneduied to be held in Union- 
preme Court, Leipzig. > 
This note, together with the cable His Attending U. S. | vm n Saturday to discuss the next 
message unanimously adopted by “ Ing * |-steps of the strike. 
5,000 workers at an Election natifica- Anti-War Congress Propose Action — 
tion rally and celebration of the 14th The National Miners Union and 


anniversary of the Communist Party NeW YORK, Sept. 26.—The U. 8. left wing forces in the United 
are 


Wie fies e 


| las Arena, was Yesterday returned to | Debartment of Labor deliberately de-| Workers of America are proposing te 
| the Communist Party, 50 East 13th | layed its decision. to admit Tom the comerenct defi to temain one 
By St., by the Western Union ‘1elegraph Mann. veteran British labor leader. ynti) the coal companies are c= 
4 ” its action in return- | mare it impossible fot Mann to reach to the $5 scale, six-hour-day, full 
ae ing the cable message, the Western New York in time for the session of ognition of the ap he full 
5 Union pointed out that the United States Congress of the mine committees to be elee- 
25 tional telegraph regulations it reads the Congress organizing committee of 
ad ‘the high contracting parties re- tment by the UM. W. A. top 
oe P Westies ‘edie: the the transmission of any private tele- States in time to address the ban- 2 
2 police attack. security dt the state“ French novelist and anti-war advo- including union dues. : 
75 tself was arrested with him, were held for Officials felt was “dangerous to the 4. He will later speak in New Tork the miners to elect their own rank 
es Special Sessions Court by the Tam- security” of the Hitlerite murder re- and several other cities under the and file leadership and to drive out 
5 many Judge who allowed the lawyer gime follows: Auspices of the Anti-War Congress. the UM W. A. leaders Lewis, Fagan, 
r mass meeting assembled protest The General Executive Board of o ee Se 
or, reopen their side of the | with all our might against mon- the Needle Trades Workers Industfial Roosevelt 
Was case after they had already rested. | strous frame-up trial and determi- Union today pledged fullest support 
7 — A yy was unable to dis- | n 8 2392» — sisutes 
— demonstrators. g urder — Gold, Louis Hyman 1 
One minute after police had car- | eeat necused. AR eee It 
ried out the judges’ order to “ | knows Nazi leaders themselves guil- called upon all shops in the clothing 
thatthe court,” following Minor’s able | ty of the fiendish arson. We de- | trades to elect delegates to the Con- 
r pro- immediate release Torgler, a 
. makers | (ross-examination of the arresting Dimi gress and urged the union member 
Administra- “Free Bob came troff, Taneff, Popoft, Thael- ship to attend the opening session of 
In the code the men asked for | like thunder through the court-room | man and all anti-fascist victims.” | the Congress Friday, September 29, 
day — murder court of their class enemies, in the name of the working 81. an hour minimum with a maxi- Windows. The workers had imme- in Mecca Temple, 133 West 55th St., 
class of the whole world, have challenged Fascism behind which stand mum of $1.50. The request of the diately formed a picket-line around tung and the Tageblatt and Lokal- | and the St. Nicholas Arena, 66th 
— 5 _ the German capitalists. Behind whom again stands the Wall Street strikers was ignored. the court-house. Court attendants anzeiger of Berlin. — oy Columbus Avenue, New 
+ imperialism, huge loans have helped Hitler Fascism—yes and | In Flint the strikers ranks are sojid,| Closed the windows, but the demand . ae . 
ae 5 r Picketing is in progress at Buick. that Robert Minor be freed increased Nazis Protest Boston and Hartford Coming 
den 4 2 ; Chevrolet and A. C. Spark Plug in volume, and the judge asked for BERLIN, Sept. 26.—The Nazi 
ok r  Daatirodt opti, whose immigrant -beotheys heiped plants, all of them subsidiaries of the | the riot squad. government today formally pro- | A mass meeting of delegates repre- 
a to build the wondrous industrial system of America, speak and fight, | General Motors. The company has Rudich, obviously under instruc- tested the expulsion of German | senting 35 organizations held in the 
8 _ therefore, against the oppressors and robbers of the American masses. made threats that a new crew has tions to dismiss the charge work. correspondents from ‘Moscow, | historic Old South Meeting House 
axe Pet 2 We American Communists, we workers and organizers, whom American been hired, but of all of these intimi- bee, Og Big granted the prosecu- *. 4 — — 1 charging that the action of the | Boston, endorsed the sending of dele- 
f 5 _ workers see in the forefront of every class battle, call upon you to de- (dations met with failure, tion the unheard of right to reopen! and Ivan : ye | Soviet Government “is in violation ae Se oe 
; wand, and enforce the demand, from Wall Street government and the their case and to introduce à $250) of “Tass,” Soviet news agen- | of existing treaties.” unqualified 
_ Hitler fascist government it supports, that Torgler, Dimitroff and Topo U. S. Senator MeAdoq bend which makes the “Injunction . were early Saturday morning 3 un delegates | héve _ been 7 
shall f : legal. dragged out their and Fore Office | elected Congress Hartford, : Rai 
05 „ to demand and ent the demand that they shall in Moscow for Visit The cross-examination of the po- placed under arrest. They were later had “requested” all German news- | Connecticut. A serid-off meeting will vide No Pay 18es 
Deere etn amet, ~ released with official papers to refrain from publishing | be held Thursday night in the T. W. — 
7 Pr ; that they iceman by Minor, which started the apologies. | . e PATERSON, N. J., Sept. 26—One 
5 — ö MOSCOW, 26.—Insisting that | cheering for the Communist candi- The four Germans affected by | the news that the Nazi correspond- C. A., with prominent speakers repre- 3 
5 to class were spized his brief visit would be “entirely un- mee oS the Soviet order represent the | ents had been ordered to leave Mos- | senting various organizations backing | of the worst sell-out agreements in 
N official,” U. 8. Senator William G (Continged on Page Two) Wolff Agency, the Koelnische Zei- cow. the Congress. the long history of A. F. of L. be- 
, 0 Mcad vg heme ley oixed ; trayals was defeated by rank and 
, e shown their | His visit follows persistent —— | file members of. the U.T.W.. Dyers’ 
e their shining | that the U. 8. is preparing to recog? ä Local Mo. 1708. en 
2 nize the Soviet Government. committees of the local rejected the 
2 : Union's Negotiating Committee 
: SAS Of ocean * DELE- 22 conference with John Moffit, U. & 
5 verdict: * AR 0 4 A J labor conciliator, and the dye manu- 
7 thetr heads But Many Districts Still Lag Behind facturers. | 
: 2 NEW YORK, Sept. 26.—All local . 1 The shop committees rejected the 
2 work. | 2n¢ r r or — settlement terms, fired the Negotiate 
: mag 8 4 of — Y we received two letters which indicate that real devotion and , and Daily Workers. They art organizing meetihgs, entertainments, affairs — e snd te 
5. our elass! egates to ” which we know exists is slowly but surely gather- | with the children, etc. ) dyers shows that the policies of the 
‘ to one and going into real action. ' And they conclude by proudly informing us that the Fridays issues National Textile Union are well une 
» Congress 42 For the past two weeks, during which | of the “Daily” were sold with record speed. derstood and are being, followed. This 
7 this district sent in only $35. This, comrades, breathes energy, life, revolutionary devotion. Such | was also demonstrated on the picket 
: 7 N f with true revolutionary energy, Philadelphia flung into | enthusiasm can break down any obstacles. And it is evident that the | lines this morning when A. F. of L. 
20 = : Drive is slowly beginning to catch fire. ° 2 and U.T.W. picket lines merged ip 
, = 2 0 0 0 many places in defiance of the M. 
, - 2 oe So See Renan et Mave two Sao r Union. of a of the h 
; and Detroit are still isolated examples. Many of the other districts John Moffit, U. 8. Labor Concilias 
are still lax, and slow in their activity for the “Daily.” tor, declared, on learning of the 
* Let us shake off all indifference, comrades. The “Daily” cannot live | strikers’ action, that “it’s incredible.” 
[AAR LY without making our $40,000 drive a success. We cannot keep our improved | Unaware of the strikers’ action, he : 
“Daily” if we fail, And if we fail in the Drive, it will be a tragic, incal- ä ef tha Tee 
de loss to the American working class. to t the settlement terme, and 
** eee $380.94 urged the strikers to join the U. 
— „ 2426.41 Only 300 of the 1.200. workers. te 
1 — * plant appeared at the company ~ 
ey Ee l . eee (Continued on Page Iwo) — 
. g 
* » * * 
a * — 
A A, . / ö >. ; 5 
. —— — , an 8 Wu —ä—ä— : — — — —— a — , — 


n 
1 
3 * 


7 
e 
2 3 


Pate pts NEW YORK.—With the month 


' “William Hodson, chairman of 
_térday stated that the Home Relief 


— Hodson, chairman of the 
 theally, “They'll starve if they don't 


‘benefits from Roosevelt's public works 


| Wemkers as the only form of aid 


RA Seeks to Break 


Sew LE rr. 
1 199 2 


* 
a é 
— —äů — 
* 
5 Py * Q 


3 


4 


"oe 
> ae 
* * 
aah 
ct . 
3 
ba N 
25 
54. 


* N 
5 ay 
* 
* 4 Ne : 
1 
F 


nor in Court 


* 


9 


No Provisions Made 
for Families Cut Off 


of October almogt here, the city yester- | 


gay appropriated two and a half million dollars for Septemfér relief. This 


gum represents 25 percent 


of the $10,000,000 set by the Welfare Council as 
the monthly amount needed to spread a minimum of relief among the 


more than a million unemployed in the city. 


heft 


4180 8 


Welfare Council, in an interview yes- 


us have 15,000 cases on file 
have mot yet been investigated. 
cases are further increased by 
30,000 families who have been 


aropped when the Red Cross and the 
Gibson Committee closed its doors. 

from the Bronx are that 55 
per cent of the workers getting re- 
lief have been dropped from the 
Relief Bureau. 


In the face of these facts, Miss 
Mary Gibbons, Tammany head of 
Home Relief Bureaus, calmly 
the blanket statement yester- 
in her office, that she could take 
of most of the 30,000 cases. 
why these 30,000 destitute 

not immediately trans- 
the Home Relief Bureau 
of being left without food, 


{ 


most cases even after it was pointed 
out that the multiple check-up sys- 
tem of the Red Cross made it almost 
impossible for a worker to obtain 
rélief from any other additiona 


Welfare Council, gave a direct con- 
tradiction to Miss Gibbons’ words. In 
his opinion, most of the 30,900 fam- 
ilies would be found applicable to 
Home Relief. When asked the direct 
„Whats going to happen to 

30,000 families cut off from their 


relief baskets,” he answered empha- 


get any relief.” 

“You see,” continued Mr. Hodson, 
“this NRA business is deceptive and 
illusory.” Then after a pause he 

in order to keep in line with 
the NRA ballyhoo, “only as far as 
the Home Relief Bureau is con- 
cerned.” He pointed out that the 


program would nos be felt until nine 
months from now and stressed the 
fact that a starving worker could not 
be told to wait for his food until 
that time. Even then, only an insuf- 
t number will find jobs on pub- 
works projects. 

ou see,” he said, “we must con- 

sider the immediate dollar and cents 

needs of the unemployed.” Asked if 
it was not true that Unemployment 
would immediately put 

and cents into the pockets of 
workers, he thought that it 

would m a way e “self re- 
and if the bosses were to 
the burden they would then 
wages. Miss Gibbons made the 
statement that now is not 
time to demand Unemployment 
„ “we can, of course, legis- 
it.” she added with a little 

, “and apply it later on.” 

The Unemployed Councils in the 
are going ahead steadily to pop- 
the Workers Relief Ordin- 

among the broad masses of the 


can give them temporary re- 
ef against the existing starvation 


N. V. Coal Delivery 
Strike of 5,000 Men 
NEW YORK, N. Y.—NRA officials 


effort to smash the walk- 
men who are demanding 
@ Miinimum wage of $41.21 for a - 


200 cops are already protect- 
but the strike is spreading. 
strike is led by the Interna- 

Brotherhood of Teamsters and 
— affiliated the A. F. 


* F. Wolff, chairman of the 
mediation board is negotiating 
with the bosses. 


Dye Strikers Spurn 
BetrayalAgreement ss 
Negotiated | by UTW 


(Continued from Page One) 


union meeting. Fifty-seven workers 
the terms were 


The vote was taken only after 
the majority of workers had accepted 
the U.T.W. settlement. 

‘Meanwhile, a picket line of 2,000 
Dye Workers tried to picket Wash- 
ington Hall, but were kept out by 
the police. . 

The remaining 1,500 workers of the 


who are members c 


-| picket line this morning. 


The sell-out signed by the U.T.W. 
Local No. 1733 and published in full 


by the rank and file 
A. F. of L. members as a complete 
and obvious betrayal of their strike. 

By the agreement the U. T. W. be- 
comes a company union, and the 
strikers are placed at the mercy of 
the employers, “It is not our pur- 
pose to hamper you in the conduct 
of your business, but to assist as far 
as possible to a much needed stabili- 


zation of the industry,” the agree- j 


ment states. The sole decision as to 
the firing and hiring of workers is 
left to the bosses it a paragraph 
which reads: “We recognize the right 
of the employers to hire and dis- 
charge, but should an employee be- 
lieve that he or she was unjustly 
discharged, he or she shall have the 
right to appeal their case te an au- 


hands of the employers the power 
to victimize all active strikers with 
. following statement “All strikers, 


It also reported in the press 
unofficially the U.T.W. had 
accept a meagre 


crease was not included in the final 
agreement which the U.T.W. leaders 
accepted. 9 

The names of the negotiating com- 
mittee of the U.T.W. have not been 


made public, but the leaders of the 


U.T.W. took part in negotiating this 
sell-out. These leaders included Ni 
Keller (Lovestonelte), and Frank 


Schweitzer, both of Associated Silk 1 


(V. T. W.), who have Béen giving the 
Dyers’ Local daily guidance and mak - 
ing all press statements for the dyers 
union and Charles Pirolo, leading 
Democratic politician, one of the 
leading organizers of the Dyers Union. 

When two pickets were arrested in 
a clash with the police in front of 
the Degrado shop this morning, the 
picket line marched to the jai] and 
demanded the release of these pickets. 

The two pickets arrested were Stan- 
ley Madesunich and Berdonand 
cenzo, both members of the NT. W. U. 
and were taken off the picket line. 


DOWNTOWN 


* 


THE LAST WORD IN FOOD 
AT POPULAR PRICES 


22 
SWEET LIFE | 
CAFETERIA | 

138 FIFTH AVENUE 


Bet. 18th and 19th Streets 
NEW YORK CITY 


— — 


= 
: 


Phene: TOmpkins Square 6-9554 | 
John’s Restaurant 
SPECIALTY—ITALMAN DISHES 
A piace with atmosphere 


JADE MOUNTAIN 


American & Chinese Restaurant 


197 SECOND AVENUE 
Bet. 12 & U 


Welcome to Our Comrades 


All Comrades meet at the 


‘Vegetarian Workers’ Club 


—DINING ROOM— 
Natural Food for Your Health 
220 E. 14th Street 


where all radicals meet 
. 12th St. New York Bet. Seecond and Third Avenues 
All Comrades Meet at the eer 


NEW 


HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA 


Food—-Proletarian Priess 5@ &. 18TH ST.. WORKERS’ CENTER—— — 


APEX CA 


827 Broadway, Between 


All Comrades Should Patronize This 
FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION SHOP |, 


FETERIA 


12th and 13th Streets 


wo drain on their dividends and bond in- 


‘ oem ° „ 
~~ Babi eA aaa 
8 


ree ; ; ‘ ; . 5. 3 . * 
« * 1 . 1 7 * + 
Mt iy 4 ~ a 1 ‘Wee? * 
e r N he > 1 vf 
Oe 3. 1 — . — 


1 
9 
1 * 1 . Uae 5 
¢ - ey me 5 8 
aT * c Ee . * . 
2 <a * nee Lge 22 ¢ 
- . 2 . 3 
Y WORKER, 
é 4 > * 
> 
oy 2 — * 7 N 


n N ‘ y 

1 ‘ 2 Ms > 5 = 1 > 

20 Rs ale 9 Ex. 3 
Be Os Oe 


2 
ö a4 De Bday 
pai 8 f 
Ky? s 


r * 1 8 
e 0 — 
‘ coy 7 
8 e 7 Neg ie 
* Pr 2 7 5 
7 4 1 
3 1 
2. 
* 


m 


. * 
Sie.) Aeon Bee 
+e rig 2 2 
n 1 * * 
age "4 2 

ro * 


* ; a 


eit 1 
et ; 8 oe 
Ay 2 oi gn 7 
909 ta ZS Ge Be ea aa ’ 


Exposes Injunction 


case presented by the Progressive 
Table Co. 
Minor, holding a copy of the in- 


i 


fi 


15 
f 


i 
HE 
Bee 
eg 
i 
F 
5 


12 
115 
186 

7 


i 

li 
17515 
7871715 
1217201 


have” and threatened 
rest for any further 
of the dignity of the court. 


boss, 
Uke one of Jake Burck's cartoons of 
fat capitalists with ears, 
had their case dismissed when it was 
tried immediately after Minor’s. They 
were charged with loitering within 
three blocks of the furniture . 
Minor had branded this territory 
earlier in the day as “the Progres- 
sive bosses czardom under the in- 


E 


would you kick us out then?” 
workers remained in the court. 


Roosevelt Offers 
$28,000,000 to. the 
Large Railroads 


To Come from Public 
Works Fund; Protects 
Dividends 


WASHINGTON, 


nounced today. 

This is in addition to the $300,000,- 
000 which the Government has al- 
ready granted the railroads through 
the Reconstruction Finance Corpora- 


on. 
Roosevelt is trying to disguise this 
new grant to the rich railroads under 
the claim that this will start business 
upward. As a matter of fact 
amount of steel rails that can be 


7 Cent Fare Looms 
as Tammany Kills 
Wall Street Taxes 


Traction Stocks Rush 
Upward; City Bonds 
Also Rise 


NEW YORE, Sept. 28.— With the 
so-called Wan 
certainty 


| Untermyer, financial ad- 
viser, and faced with the necessity of 
raising at least $30,000,000 in new 


Cops Fight Workers} 
in Court as Minor 


— 


Gaiters New Yok 


Supt. of Schools O'Shea's N.R.A. Letter suggests that 
teachers support Roosevelt in spite of any misgivings. In 
other words, be docile, subservient, unthinking and typical 
“100 Percent Americans.” | 


Anti- War Leaflets Fly” 


Hotel Astor Calls Immigration: Authorities to 


Over ‘Great White Way’ *"** 5 


a 


i 
8 


* 


it 


| 
: 


anf 
5 


know why tl A ‘smiles are 
— — r 
. of men, some of 
trom the % 
— Ee 
Russian. es 


| 


a 
ee eee 
e 2 ee, 5 
1 8 . 22 
‘ 2 : 
9 8 


4 * be 1 4 5 4 7 ; 
4 - — * 7 , . 2 
J r . A 
“ ' K A 8 8 n . 
4 on * - 2 a if 
J te 1 re 2 wae 
4 4 K 7 ö AP =, bcp” ah 
: ; 7... = = N 2 * 1 
E N a - 2° N : — — 2 
5 3 N — ’ xX; es ee 2 
4 3 2 . 1 N 
* * * : 1 yD — Bs 5 ie 4 
ö ~ ‘ * a? a 8 
2 ‘ . fy 1 ons * 7 «at ia 
oe - * — ; . 4 
8 ie 8 — , - 
: 7 * 2 1 : 6 . _ te > z= : * 
2 * , . ie 5 , 72 5 N 9 
1 — ~ * y “= 5 Ps) 
N 8 0 t 2 
1 ‘ — = 2 i. * 
„ 5 & 2 8 * te - 8 
2 9 * a * — : 4 us Ss 
4 = * 3 * 3 1 
* 2 — 1 +e - * 5 * . 7 
7 1 7 * 7 » — * 2 
4 * 2 4 
7 — — 4 
. 5 aA 5 : N 
5 4 9 4 5 
3 2 5 
‘ : 3 
' . = | __— 4 7 — 2 1 2 
ee * 4 unn A K r y 
~ ’ — ih a r 4 Ais 5 


b 


Arrest Workers But Are Unsuecessful ‘the n 
NEW YORK CITY, N. ¥.—It rained leaflets in Times Square yostérday. | 1 
rn si steel 
Cadillac, of ene calling Spon the workers to support the United States (Continued from Page 1) well o¢ ex-dfficio handshaker, patron 7 
Anti-War Congress. 8 — — extraordinary ot document forxers 
pieces. The miners are dissatistied and, to pick up extra change, stock - 
A mepeyhane, pecker dhouted to 6.000 Shoe Strikers with conditions, and though they holder and general manager at John 
F N ‘have not yet clearly aii] Wanamaker’s. The newsreels show 
support iti- War 0 demands, are already tor a shot of him grinning broadly as the 
r otel nion Approval . e te neti ote r e Wane 
: ; mine committees and for full union maker delegation files past, a study girls and 
ee r 1 j ; critics Together 
many, ’ „ in <a 8 
dee the eee , whe at Giant Mass Meet yp 
October 1 to $ at the St. Nicholas movies ment 3 
: of the two hotels ini- Demand N.R.A. Probe ! without 
called Police Headquar- 
aga er tae rte of Shoe Trade 
ay from the various’ suites) ew yORK.—No doubt would have 
in the two hotels facing. Times °° in in the minds of the shoe 
Square. manufacturers as to which union the 
Colonel Fargoe, publicity man for hoe chose to support 
the Hotel Astor, one of the swankiest they witnessed the 
in New York, where officers) monstration of 6,000 workers at Ar- 
of Army and Navy stop over, cadia Hall Monday 
was particularly angry. The meeting had been called to re- 
Colonel Fargoe promptly called the port the conference with the NR. A. 
. at which the shoe bosses failed to 
a : put in an . * 
i thelr vain efforts e e ined’ propasd” the 
the leaflet throwers and megaphone | question of recognition of the union 
speakers. ; be left to the Washington adminis- 8 
from the Sanitation Department to to work with all demands granted. 3 
sweep up the fluttering leaflets. Frank Costello was chairman of the 1 
Mr. A. E. Williamson, president and meeting. Speakers in Italian and 25 
General Mangger of the Hotel Cadil- English stressed the importance of 8 
lac, “in the heart of Times Square,“ Tecognition of the Union as the only, Fe. 
stated that he nearly caught one assurance that the workers’ victory ed 
the workers who hired the suite fac- Will be secured. ey 
ing Times Square, Room as he Fred Biedenkapp received a tre- * 
through the servants’ quarters into ive utes by the strikers who rose N 
the crowded streets below. Oh, how to their feet to demonstrate their trusts are Mor- * 
I would like to have taught that loyalty to the Industrial Union. gan and they fh: 
rascal,” were Mr. Williamson’s sor- capitalist | are for the shop an U. M. are 
rowful words justice, which had jailed four ,mil-|w 4 where it was before nee 
Interested workers continued to itant members of the union for the big so-called “victory” that the Peas 
pick up the leaflets, as thousands| Sctivity. He declared that in the | miners were told Lewis scored. | appointed to defend him had asserted 2 
passed the busy intersection. The eighth week of the the un This situation reveals that that he would defend T “ 3 
cops were ready with riot squads and 1 not weaker, but in a much stronger the NRA and tried to! person“ but would * * 
tear gas, to pounce upon any attempt W K ee n Communist Party of Germany—that| Nichards. es 
from the two leading hotels left them | Ds of the Daily Worker and | to work, : it du ta of detendng Bir Pann, \Brooklyn . N. .. . 000 100 001-2 @2 
thwarted and chagrined. the Fretheit for their support of the| ‘The Lewis, Fagan, Feeny leadership | °° (he Task dun der Lubbe Gun 100 000 002-8 91 
2 „Keen Interrogation of Marinus van der Elliett a Guten, Lopes: | ae 
. ; The meeting adjourned after a re~|_ The miners are dlaregarding them.| Lade Dutch provocateur, was re. Kies N 1 
solu a they making every — oa" 
Riot Squad Can’t the NRA National Labor Advisory I. Seniesa ty were ond — . oo 22 Games Today. . po 
Board to start an investigation of — strike. actual! burn ere. Dee, 
U II Pick conditions in the shoe industry and every effort to ie tr tee nl ee She tock tue 
E 1 eters a vote taken to continue the strug- set miners back ‘by Oct. 2nd, The pzpsecution having brought a 
_ | gle for recognition of the Union, | When the code and agreement go into % r (Only Games Scheduled.) we 
f D effect and when Lamia hope to come| Nee" yee cotag ‘Base, Wtodst| Ameren Lengee | 
OF VOL. actory ——| out as u hero at the A. F. of L. con- New York st Philadelphia (two) 
vention also opening in Washington | SUsht to prove that on February B. games) iss 
Strikers Reform Line Cit Events Alm to Break Strike —— e fire in the ‘attic of 8 at 
After Cops Br * Murray, O'Leary and Fagan, U. M:| (Torgler, testifying yesterday, had 
2 ° W. A. officials in Pennsylvania, are yioorously denied that van der Lubbe 
: Notice, Members of Sec. 1, C. P. work by Monday, | muntst Patty of Germany and char- 
NEW YORK, N. vhs sirens of Manx, president of Distt! acta his friends 
the riot squad echoed and re-echoed an- 
around Iith and Broadway last eve- ae, 
ning, amidst the shouts and cheers of the 
ont S28 Woke — — * Palace a few dove prior 0 DR. JULIUS 1 
Workers of the Doll Shop bn lim k. LUTTINGER TO SPEAK —— Reichstag blaze. 19 JO 0. 2 
and Broadway where the blue eagie| Dr. Paul Luttinger, who conducts | queting a strike because the code ̃7— Joumeisis laughed up- i} 107 BRISTOL STREET |) 
pasted window 0 e medi umn Daily ; ~ |] Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn 1 
for a 30-hour week and'a living wege mene wil lecture at a regular | changing’ to something else” | plained, im his alleged confession, that NONE: DICKENS 5 
: . . | ore erase it Sad een St co to Ot toms as na oa eae | 
The riot squad League, at 563 Sixth Ave, on A) pee eee . and Was extinguished by the|\ . noe 
line, but it Teformed as soon as the See Sex Life,” tonight 30 | ‘as before, they are striking for higher ... ee * 
r to visitors will be | wages, for better conditions for the| The 24-year-old Hollander Dutch- | „ 
Ppeared. 10 cents, N man continued to be a baffling wit- Intern Workers Order 18 
Scabs have been taken into the shop Ms Bor rights of organization. Only now, the) 128 today, showing himesif to be 2 
and ane ‘at work, jand the picketer| Attention“ Veteran Delegates. 25 ue ing, 8 Birnen ung e ‘an out-and-out imbscilé oF 8 DENTAL DEPARTMENT 8 
van : themselves of | Superb actor, playing a role for the 80 FIFTH AVENUE * 
made a or W elected . man former illusions. Thev FLOOR | ; 1 s 
r t was a „ but was e are * Dr. C. eissman 5 
in the shop. 
was arrested 
after a chase 
Department 
Rousseau over the head 
for the picketer. 
the ground unconscious. 
The Doll and Toy 
the strike. 
bers of local 
with the American 
Labor, although left 
ip the leadership of 


ee: > ra — 1 = 
F NS RITE SNE ETI 


er... "tao eS 


rens 


nits 


enen 


r ae ie UF 


7 rr 


‘ . 2 
a; . 
rss 

. } 4 
“38a © 
: . 
. 4 Z 
- 
1 


— een ee ane ee —— 


—ͤ—I—ũAœñ—— . — — ————— | ä—iͤFůyyꝛy—̃ — — — . —ß' — —— H:: 


Electric Plant in Springfield, Mass. 


— —ͤ—[—'—̃né— — — — 


PICKETS BY 
CHEMICALS FLUNG BY SCAB 
IN NEW MEXICO COAL STRIKE 


» * 


4 


ay : | Re Strikers Hear Bill Dietrich; Communist Party 
9 he} Representative, Tell Party Role in the % 
= potest | Strike of the National Miners Union 4 
5 3 n * : GALLUP, New Mexico, Sept. 26.—Thirty-one pickets were injured lam 
are.’ pen two| Dr 
vo Rhode picket on his way to work in the struck Gomerce mine. Twelve year 
de montnss old Julio Trombini fell screaming to tue ground, blinded by the fluid from 
an etree | Nati blinded, groped i “he 
as . » on 
trees = settling 1 I pain, An tig 2 
„ the hundred thou- E old mother of a Mexican miner 
oe 2 and ven ts r, Cantrell, | whe weaned the pick 
‘of | have ob- : ODE) Wie ets, immediately ordered six of them 
24 5 thou * F oe 4 } a ae ö 5 to the hospital, Among was 
tes. | . wae : Cleveland Showing. nd 

4 4 de- e a Pa Ignacia Macias, 14-yéar old girl, who 
ao the | ' _ Photo shows workers on strike at the Springfield, Mass, plant of the Westinghouse Electric Co. Reg. ,,CLEVELAND, OA slide. show| was active in the school strike called 
> 2 yhich | nition of their union is the chief demand of the work ers. . 1 Rog Roy — N = Pen 3 3 

7 * * eS 49 on Friday, Sept. 29, 7 p.m. at by military court on vagrancy 
while A4 an Grdina Hall, 6021 St. Clair Ave 

oi | . . . charges. The doctor reports it is 
2 se 10,000 Miners Vot Strikebreakers WOF Kk R act, scl matt e Ut 
5 “a mee 3 | 1 ers 0 E OT on Gompers’ Memorial mission will be ten cents. six. | 
— 2 committee, who ? y oy. Soe NEW YORK. — Strikebreakers ELECTION CARNIVAL IN Militiamen here, contrary to the 
. at. longer an a Sap il vention are working on the elaborate bronze PITTSBURGH ° usual practice did not halt Reese's 

. » the other workers ’ . ; memorial statue of the late Samuel al A 
me of — a xf — 9 . 4 e Pa. -A Communist a a — — military pass 
17 i 1 letters from : = = ee Gompers, Presid ec ampaign Carnival and n en camp. Reese 
alutes gov- demanding Not a Single UMWA Official Asks for Floor: * l .., Which is scheduled to | Dance is scheduled heer at Princess | continued his attack unmolested by 
ans 2 received = Feel A h et Too Unh ’ 1 75 bg ae Mee Hall, at 35 Miller St., on Friday, Sept. the troopers present, and then pro- 
oe 5 3 despite Levin's| tm 8 ealth . ; al- | 29 at 8 p.m. ceeded Gomerco under guidance 
tif 2 will te the NRA blue ee Sin Their 6 n y ome ** — — 4 . Ed r 1 is being held under the — an meee guard. Pickets were 
we the * pledge tor yi Corporation, auspices of the Workers Cultural | held back by drawn bayonets. When 
oy 4 bargain- wits eatin 8 No. 2 in Corona, Long Island, struck a committee A. 
fee sor the BOBTOWN, Pa., Sept. 26—Ten thousand striking rank and file miners two weeks ago, refusing to accept the Sr te Beane Cities ina — Harrison to . 
tennis ra 2 UTW and from the pits of Western Pennsylvania and West Virginia with a mighty starvation pay of $10 to $24 a week Many features of interest to workers arrest of Reese, he answered, “It 
5 at textile} roar voted Friday to hold rank and file convention in Uniontown on K wer at Bm affair of thls Rind are being e 
A a; Sept. 30. | 7 . over as a surprise, All workers pickets showed captain a partic- 
Papp) ah | the state police of West Virginia kept an all-night vigit-on an When the strike was called, Iron 28 Urged to come, Admission is only | ularly bed case. The captain r 
. te — * 5 en „and Bronze W. kers Local 48 : cents. plied, that’s not the militia’s busi- 
78 = roads eee ness, that strikers business.” He then 
urned 2, in- A? F. call out ſour 7 | 
len- Jer rem the Scotts Ran section | Of. thelr members. Nor were the Am , ; disperse. ‘The pickets ets did not budge. 
— ec in'alipping through db. | chasers called out. They are ger, American Radiator z 2 
> built lines and were — by the shed bers of the Chasers Leaguc cf North ‘ 2 Whine cooneaee aa 

- America. Strikebreakers will com- 

— — AM e 
steel were — varus Vie just | the demands of the strikers are con- i. The pickets remained on duty 1 
5 es } | rginia | ceded pon ves „ 

ae a Fight New Wage Cut before the — Si Justice of 
— age ¢ main purposs of the mest Fifth Ave, Coach Co. 700 at-SMWIU Meet e 
ht-oar ae plans 7 ye, „company grounds. International 
sr or spreading of the strike which now Has Company Union, a a ee Labor Defense is leading the 

* tees | A ’ ) against the evictions. 
aa t — * AF. L's Tardy Efforts ing soe 7 5 5 by 2 that the campaign tn defense 

#§ coal is being shipped . arrested strike leaders was 

5 4 : NEW YORK.—More than a week Ae te of the decisive factors their 
7 — ae ad 2 . . Pennsylvania struck ter- has passed since. the Fifth Ave. Coach BAYONNE, N. J., Sept. 26—A deci- — 2 release last 3 
* 1 2 22 | : . Co, has signed with the N. R. A. but sion by the American Radiator Co. morning. 

f ae 8 2 : on | Miners Speak. — 1 Nypertoning Sng. for re- to cut the working week of the 1,400 Exiquo' Navarro (“Littl Clas 
deadly ee _ . Pittsburgh | One after the other these rank main the same —— there eg workers to four days with a corres- 8 Mexican strike leader ot 
will of SEPT. 30: 7 d by the Packing House Work- and file miners took the floor and no increase in wages. . this morning from hie home ca 
ie eae o ole eR SP i Me ers’ Industrial Union as a victory poke of the necessity of the min- ‘The company has organized its own jo A 27 85 2 by the Gomereo Company property ‘a 
I out- n a for the workers right to organize and rs in the entire soft coal fields of company union which includes the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial | attempt to evade military police, who 
ia the! an . y at James St. NB. (top — tor collective bargaining.” the ad ase out 2 the 2 — 2 2 the officials of — —— Union. are dispersing the pickets in the 

3 eee . | started when a sommit-'| in order force coal opera e stockholders. ons are camps, . them from join- 
he Gay © 26, 22 Aa A apo nse protesting to the man- to give them complete recognition Ae gg tg eg byl 1 a — e ing * He was followed by 
’ e iormation o moun 
enters this cents an ‘our paid’ to girl wortars|Not « single oficial of the UMWA | #, union By signing cards.  Paiture | "eek, Pul, when, no reply was reoelved,| Tomine. ao caught up, wit ish 
the work- were fired. Three departments then asked for the floor. And it te do this singles out the worker to qustrial Union organiser. He pointed time succeeded N 
f in a rv the 2 was | eeial discrimination and even loss dus r — 
* Ford, _—— a resul t bosses were | a very unhealthy atmosphere for | of job. THe signature virtually im- out, that the question of pay raises 
wi pero “the 2 e 8 Fellow dog com- e to that of the Stay weak. 
: ers „ 1 
n b a 00 Commutiet at 211 South Concord 8 e particularly in the 1922 strike] Great dissatisfaction exists among , ™ 1 — th this policy, Gemends try- 
ranks of on: watement calling — — 1 reas 1 rai ais the hate eee 8 were — up * — — the 
: | ‘forgotten’ John L ba ve a picket line is formed. Each morning 
concessions . 5 The by a motion to strike unless they 
Whe k Amalgamated Street Car Em- they may be seen making their 
higher. wages Nee Po IE) ne ot Weak = ra ployees’ Union of the A. F. of L. are, immediately complied with. SOD | erde the hills, and are dispersed, 
mighty Show in than ever to that more than 3 trucks pe ote bi 1 15 er! “ — eniaiie. —— — — to succeed in getting around the 
‘homes of the small Armour’s ahd | had been turned back by the state | recognition. The heads of this unten | the motion into action. — r A, 
are in denger af losing Aght for higher | police and that more than 6,000 will merely assist the Fifth Ave. Coach |, 4 Proposal to join with the A. F. ot and taking paths unknown to the 
the bankers and real wages and improvement of conditions. miners were unable to come Co. to continue the present company L. Vas rejected unanimously. troops. As each new arrival of the 
. F shouts of let's go over union conditions in exchange for a dawn patrol succeedg in reaching 
r. 13th St a — 1 ein l enen g the line’ went up from an sections | Check-off of dues from the workers, | PUNCH AND JUDY SHOWS | the picket line, the pickets chet, 
1 2 + ater wep g — Union stick af the crowd. The spirit of the REET ; By a Worker Correspondent and sing. 
DD —— Pout * . peter — that we can in the u- Miners is one of Gaigrminetion to — pol We “ap some * * — 8 Blue 1 3. ot eae in the history 
| a : fight to the end for recogniti ' oer a e the National Robbery Act, is in up, listened at then 
wt rights. Nr. On ager fe — of the ln with aimetbat — Communist Party in the fight until its glory in Fort Bragg (seven miles meeting to a representative of the 
tery. hateiteds ef workers tram in ard of wages bot dame time — mg Mg sie BA are — vel from here). There are established two — — Party. Bill Dietrich, rep- 
8 —.— tates resol ongra n 1 4 resen Party District 
Be ay —4 other plants are signing to clean out of the-ranks of the the Communist Party on its 14th — ney dees ee ee — and No. 10, . of — A. F. of 
a up Industrial Union. Don’t UMWA the officialdom which today ,niversary adopted by the Scandina- Judy show. They beckon and call to | L., spoke to an enthralled audience, 
hold J join and fight in your! is working hand in mund wich the vian Club. all that come and go through the promising the support of the Com 
1 own 5 5 N 5 
ie ; coal operators in trying to send office; they dip the pen in ink and | munist Party to their struggles. “Not 
5 tn the miners back into the pits. extend a card for your endorsement | only does our Party support the fights 
3 a nila The West Vir represente- Write to the Daily Worker about) of the robbery act. of the NMU but they support the 
lee By Artists 8 tives pledged that d the middle every event of dnic-cot to workers Well, here is one kid that don't | Struggles of the rank and file of the 
1 will sell prints available for fram- The workers in the Independent of next week every Mine in north. | “Sieh occurs in your fectory, trade endorse it to encourage the common | United Mine Workers as well,” Diet- 
221 3 dy well known artiste as Union are aroused by this attack and W t Vi 11108 he union, workers’ organization or lo- enemy in their criminal ways against rich said. “The Communist Party 
2 51 — * * intend to defeat any attempt of A. F. ern es irginia- Ww out hts, BE W labor. It must cost a lot of money for | is the only Party that takes an un- 
Lopez; — , Gellert, of L. gangsters to break their strike and that no coal would leave — cat. BECOME A WORKER coR- this Punch and Judy stunt all over qualified stand in defense of the 
1 be ST ATIONERY + * Lozowiek, “ro or their union. state. —.— RESPONDENT! the United States of America. working class and its struggles.” 
er £ . and . many others. — — 
neee SUPPLIES |) sen ot we, N 
f 0 wi R. A., Injunctions, Terror Fail to Stop Big Strike W 
a 3 N. A. URE ave in INew Yor U 
At Special Prices for Organiastions || for a small fee. b , >. 8 
— — — A bass relief plaque of Maxim — ; ~ 
| ae. . eae famous 163,000 Workers In- 
, ’ Arrest Picket in Strike More Than 60,000 
volved in Month’s Strik 1 3 P H Workers Were Led 
es in rogress ere of Bathrobe Workers TUUL. Uniona by 
a yA NEW YORK.—Bathrobe workers of | n 
NEW YORK.—More than 70,000 workers are out on strike in N B. Brown and Sons at 305 7th Avenue | More 
York City today. The following are the ne gern Agra 3 went on strike yesterday demanding Strike Wins Pay. 
better conditions. A mass picket line NEW rok. Workers at the 
shoe worker 8,000 | Tobacco workers + 500) | succeeded in defeating the scabs who f am > 
2 13. port Manufacturing Co, 50 
, 1221 K Painters .......... 5 18000 Carpenter 100 | tried to take the strikers’ jobs. In — 8 
* of workers 7,000 | Belt and Leather workers... 500 the clash, one picket was arrested. peat increases in their 
N IAN pay. A and in front | “Micials were later pared down, with- | | Coal drivers and helpers ... 3.30% Underwear workers .......... 12,000 | | He was fined $10 in court and was Weekly wages and recognition of their 
workers’ | out consulting the workers, on the Underwear workers. . 3,000 Wire workers 300 | | released after the union paid the fine. shop committee and the drygoods 
_ ORKERS’ HOME, ait tad el same industry, , D „ pave 0% Metal werber 5% At a strike meeting yesterday the workers’ union after a short strike 
5 ü plea that “we must meet the bosses , mass 
29 West 115th Street came to & decent | nf way.” A deal between the a. , Dol and Toy workers ........ 3,000 Ladies’ Tailors ......... 2. „ 2000 | | WOemetD Gecided to continue on Monday. 
New Yak Ouy, . conditions, fre Box workers .......... 1,500 | Electrical workers (Estimated) 500 | | picketing and to actively aid the un- 
: | Sear of L. officials and the bosses in New 1 ee ion in organizing the open shops in Kni 
RESTAURANT and shop. For sas, mn. Tot sent the workers back to the| Oe Dyers and Pressers. — — — 400 || the industry. | nitgood Strikers 
BEER GARDEN are being know that shops, — Brooklyn mare then „„ eee A Strike for More Pay at | Call United Front Meet 
— —-—-„—t-— —u means sweat out on strike. | 


N. R. A. Textile Shop | Cooper Union Today 


. ming, * * 
More Workers Join . Knitgoods strikers, in the third week 
. the sh Louis Hor- | 
Cleaners, Dyers Strike | ak, 2 w. zis: St. walked out an or weir struggle, led by the Indus- 
— strike on Monday, led by the Tex- trial Union, staged a mass picketing 
| we Trimming Workers’ Union. The | demonstration in the mill sections 


ig 


, 
i 
i 
: 
4 
: 
| 


demoralized with the failure ot the Move for Speedy Sell 


Workers Cooperative Colony 
2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST 
(OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) 


has now REDUCED THE RENT 


B 
; 
. 


f 
7 
7 
i 


74 
1 

f 
1 
4 


Eg 


, ' ON THE APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS 


i 
: 


: 
: 


7 


ö 
i 
E 


f 
3 


| 


+—— 


F 
g 


: 
i 
11 


rf 
27 


— 


— 


Rie ig bat A 2 
as 2 5 ce eee 
N os . * ; 

— : ; 1 ‘os 
. — 2 2 
n 4 8 * n 

5 7 * 

g a 1 

pF 


+, ie Fs 


37 
os 
a) bas 


‘Skee 
4 ky Sa 3 
r 
a4 — 5 * 


i 2 
— 4 


5 


NG OUT THE OPEN LETTER 


pero Toilers in Leadership 
K Wickwire Steel Strike 


SF ge 


— 


4 
a 


5 
13 


* not dare attempt to break 
unity. Thousands of workers 
“are talking about the splendid leader- 
ship of the strike, which was in the 
ain composed of Negroes. It is the 

. the history of the steel 
industry in the United 
egro steel workers have 
lead the white workers 
the terrible condi- 
prevail in the steel in- 


te i 
eo 
.“ie 

5 EG 
11 
3 9 
teu 
A 


Another outstanding feature of the 
. omg was the splendid support given 
I mca. strikers by the Workers’ Inter- 
Relief that served the 

sandwiches and coffee while 
the picket line. The Croatian 

gave their hall free to the 
for meetings. The Unem- 
Council was active in the 
of strong ties between the 


a mith the Strikers’ Defense Commit- 


* — 

strike began on August f4th 
and was settled August 26th. The 
Strike was a tremendous victory 
despite the fact that the other de- 
Bb ' partments refused to support the 
Strike. The demands of the strikers 

1925 were as follows: 


11) Recognition of the shop commit- 
N tee of the Steel and Metal Work- 


* ers’ Industrial Union. 
N a No favoritism to any workers in 
any department. 


* Al workers upon returning to 


n work shall not be subjected to 
‘i 1 an medical examination. 
ie All strikers to return to the same 
(4 fee's job that they held prior to the 
. strike. 
That immediately upon return to 
| a ee work the shop committee shall 
me th: begin negotiations with the em- 
18 ployers for increased wages for 
Bo ie all the workers in the shop. All 
1 of the above demands were 
ie Re) granted and in addition wage in- 
dCreases have been secured as a 
. result of the negotiations. 
>. * 2 
phe INCE the return of the victorious 
an strikers the company has called 


m the Amalgamated Association of 
Tron, Steel and Tin Workers affiliated 
td the A. F. of L. to organize the 
_*  ~ departments, that remained in the 
. + shop during the strike. 

1 b sie The foremen are the active agents 
dl the company and the Amalga- 
les mated Association of Iron, Stee] and 


80 ses Bring in A. F. of L. Leaders to 
event Organization and Strike Struggles 


By MANNING JOHNSON. 
Buffalo District Organizer, C. P., U. S. A. 
1 II. 5 
NI of the outstanding features of the strike was the splendid solidarity 
i mm the Negro and white workers. In the past the Negro workers 
dere used as strike breakers. The employers were able to play back against 
wwe in all previous struggles, but in the Wickwire strike 
; 2 found this absolutely impossible. So remarkable was the 
_ the capitalist press and the employ-® 
3 Tin Workers to organize these de- 
partments. It is clear that the com- 
pany intends to use the A. F. of L. 
leaders to smash the Steel and Metal 


workers are being put on their guard 
against the treachery of the company 
officials, the foremen and the Amal- 


being made by the company to rob 
the workers of every gain and to 
strangle the workers and to enslave 
them through the help of the A. F. 


The workers, who are organizing 
into the Amalgamated Association of 
Iron, Steel and Tin Workers; may do 
well to take into serious considera- 
tion the treacherous and shameful 
betrayal of the steel workers during 
the great steel strike, led militantly 
by Comrade Foster and by the or- 
ganizers of this very organization. 

It may be well to recall again the 
refusal of the A. F. of L. to organize 
the steel industry since the infamous 
sell-out in 1919, the open support of 
the starvation minimum wages of the 
steel code submitted by the steel mag- 


It may be well also to remember 
that the A. F. of L. leaders are cal- 
ling for “class peace” in the pursuance 
cf the policy of “no strike and no 
The honorable Mr. John- 
stone of the Central Labor Council 
of Buffalo stated, “we are absolutely 
evainst strikes and shall go to the 


Mr. Johnstone has expelled hun- 
dreds of A. F. ef L. members from 
the unions for non-payment of dues. 

The Steel and Metal Workers’ In- 
dustrial Union has won many. de- 
mands of the steel and metal workers. 
Its record is a record of persistent 
and militant struggle for the inter- 
ests of all steel and metal workers. | 
Every steel and metal worker should 
join up with this union, because it 
is the only really class struggle union 
that is fighting for the steel 
metal workers irrespective of color, 
nationality, religious or political be- 


The most important and immediate 
task of the Steel and Metal Workers’ 
Industrial Union in the Wickwire 
plant is to immediately extend a 
special invitation to the workers in 
the departments that are being ap- 
proached by the Amalgamated As- 
sociation of Iron, Steel 
Workers is to develop united front 
struggles under the leadership of the 
Steel and Metal Workers Industrial 


Brings Sanitation 
Problem in Chicago 


(By a Worker Correspondent) 

CHICAGO, Il.—Since the govern- 
ment put a bonus on pigs under 100 
pounds and piggy sows, the markets 
of the Middle West have been glut- 
ted with pigs. The most of these 
pigs are bing converted into lard 
and fertilizer. Those above 80 pounds 


are “held for export.” According to 
a statement by Ludo C. Pickett, 


supply. 
In other words, it does not matter 
how many workers are 
within a few blocks of where tons 
and tons of good food.is being de- 
stroyed, none of the food will be 
diverted for the purpose of main- 
taining life. 

On the other hand, in the words 
of Mr. Pickett, “As a matter of fact 
the A. A. A. (agricultural adjustment 
administration) regards it as more 
important to the success of the pork 
price project that sows farrowing 
pigs shortly be sold now than the 
little pigs.” 

The cause of Mr. Pickett’s remark | 
is the fact that the farmers are NOT 
sending their piggy sows to market. 
They are holding the sows for the 
pigs that will be ready for market 
next year, when. as they correctly 
realize, there will be “still too many 
pigs” and the government will have 
to destroy them. 

Another side of the picture is the 


difficulty the government is run- 
ning into with the fertilizer made 
from the pigs. It is causing a sani- 
tation problem in Chicago, and will 
cause a “market problem” all over. 

So, it is a mad chase of a mad 
and decaying system for a way out. 
Too many unemployed—too many 
pigs—too many farms. And now 
too much fertilizer! 

The unemployed workers who have 
produced this “surplus” must de- 
mand the use of these foods by de- 


and manding unemployment insurance 


and putting up a struggle against 
forced labor. : 


RELIEF FLOUR GONE 
(By a Worker Correspondent) 
STAUNTON, II. —-We still get 
relief, but not any more flour, they 
tell us that all government flour 
is gone, only a few thousand sacks 
left for emergencies. 


| All surrounding towns around 


here are not getting flour, but get 
$1 a week in place of that. 


PP xy 


. 
* 
rr 
n 


By HELEN LUKE. 

2 Thirty thousand families cut off from relief Monday! 
= That means an immediate struggle to force relief. We'd like to 
Pear from some of these families. Comrades, we are soliciting letters of 
all kinds in regard to home problems and suggestions. We want recipes 
| all sorts of national dishes—we may as well internationalize the cook- 


now as later. How about sauer-@ 


aa 
Fe, 


Melon or grapes 

French toast, syrup or jelly 

Milk 

4 Lunch 

Tomato and egg salad, rye bread 
Tapioca pudding 

* Tea 


. Dinner 

“Beef cabbage soup 

brown potatoes 

. Coffee. Fresh pineapple (optional) 


15 


25 
21 


in ice-box until noon. 


15 
iy 
A 


— 


8 


— 1 n =e 
* * . — nnn mek 
* 4 N r 3 4 oe — ¥ 7 ** — — : 8 . > a * * 
be 5 8 Dre 
. x 4 — ~*~ a a — 7 . > “year 1 
a 7 we . Wei 5 , 
' . a ae oa a ue * 


> * at 
: * * r 
n * * “a 8 
71 hee) ; 4 4 ey 1 
— 1 J ö 1 
8 8 * * 
„ e if. 


¥ 


1 
: 


os. 


F. . ; with white. 
8 Nor dinner there's Anna's famous 
2 cabbage soup (if it isn’t it ought to 


onion.) 
“There should be cold boiled pota- 
yesterday. I vou have an 


¢» 
* 
* 


Praten, gefulte fish, tamales, and 

1? Please contribute. How 

~ the Blue Eagle affected your 
? 


Heat fat about size of egg in large 
skillet, tipping so that sides are 
greased. Add a finely chopped onion 
* to potatoes if you like, and salt and 
e have on hand now interesting 
from F.M.W. and R.C.M. It 
5 to look as if we'd have to 
_t™ake short shrift of the cooking 


Turn potatoes into hot skillet, tap 
down lightly with knife or spoon, 
clearing from sides of pan, so it 
makes one large cake. Brown over 
slow fire, turning pan if flame is un- 
Don't stir while browning! 
When partly finished, moisten with 
3 or 4 tablespoons of hot juice from 
Dig up a bit from 
bottom to see when brown enough. 
Shuffle pan occasionally 
from sticking, adding a bit of fat if 
necessary. When there 
brown crust over the bottom, fold 
over half the potatoes so you have a 
fat oval cake in half the pan. Tip 
I am very proud of 
these potatoes; they are so good! 
Everyone always likes them. 

Tonight wash some prunes and let 
stand in cold water for tomorrow; 
allow about 4 or 5 to each person. 
Save also a little sliver of the lemon 
that you use for the soup. 


. 
1 
i 


i 
if 
i 


Four quarts, chopped 
quarts EACH of green tomatoes and 
medium onions; 2 cups EACH of 
green peppers, celery, and carrots; 
1 cup sugar, and % 


a few minutes with cold water 
yolk from turning dark; when 


shell, rinse, and cut into 
Wash a tomato for each per- 
ut open in sections, and heap 
Serve on letture with 
Tapioca recipes are on 
I believe. Make with brown 
for caramel flavor, using about 
as much as is neces- 


> bel) Perhaps you have part of a 
' @abbage left from making cole-slaw 
| yesterday. You will need about one 
sized head. Shred it and. 

boiling water. Drain, and, 
pan 


pound mixed spices or white mus- 
tard seed.. Use all vegetables raw, 
.| a8 finely chopped or ground as pos- 
sible. Mix togther, drain, cover with 


Can You Make ’em 
Yourself ? 


The dress shown today will be most 
“uitable for the maturer figure, such 
as could not well wear yesterday’s 
‘esign. It would be nice developed in 


glossy silk, as shown, or in a wool, 


silk, or cotton crepe using a dark 


2 


INN ö 


ber. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE. 

Address orders to Daily Worker 
Pattern Department, 243 W. 17th St., 
New York City. 


teaspoon powdered alum 
to eat in a week; 
the 


5 
é 


cold vinegar, and seal into jars. 


< ary) * 2 1 . . —— 
1 + * tegen E * i ae } 
i r a a * A 
2 “Ne V 
, 1 Ao Me eee ee Se 
pet A * 9 i oo a) 


¥. 
a 
1 
4 
> £3 
Se 


. 
> 
F 
i 
| 1 5 ba 1 


= 
8 2 8 4 * 0 We . a s 
* 1 4 J 5 ‘ tl 1 R 
. * a N * 4 Sty. 5 Ss ee — a > me — . 
; ** 5 ’ 9 , 1 : 3 43 8 7 
/ . : + © a* ‘ 2 Y 
- N * ö - i ö 4 . 1 . 7 
4 yo. — . . * A 
, 0 2 * * 
ty n 4 * a — N * * 
77 , ‘ : ‘ * oF . 2 E } 2 ; 
2 ne; 4 ‘ * 8 a N 1 7 * és 4 4 * 
o - “ 7 92 * 8 yt 8 uv 2 * 
. 7 N 2 * — a 1 5 7 5. . * - = a 
a ö — — 4 * 5 * ’ N N * + Pheer Se 
— 3 4 9 J ai ‘Se 2 7 ö 
; . 2 1 * = a a . Fx 
7 , fe « * ; 7 f * e 
* 7 1 , - 4 8 . A 8 * 2 „ * . N 
R ; ey + 1 — ies Bee ee om 
. . J q : - 7 Slee” a 
15 + 1 in > ~ 1 . 5 . 4 ‘a eT. ate: 1 


81 


E 


1 


* * 1 » . 
N . * * 
e e ee ee 


115 
Hk 


gf 


8 


i 


H 


1 


i 

1 

1 
51 


ds 
+ 
2 


EE 
ef 


= 
< 


5 


E 

| 

4 
; 
RS 


1 


* 


182 2 
15 | 


is 


18 


8. : 
1 1 
ERE 
= 
4 


5 


3 5 N 
+ 
» * 
7 pe 5 2 
. 1 3 N N P 3 : — are 
2 1 : 0 E. ‘ 1 " . 
* ? 9 4 2 2 11 : 5 A _ 
2 * = : — 8 7 1 22 — 8 he er ke 
aw 7 ON oe Oe > = 1 = * * 
¥ 5 . ~ Am N W 8 - 0 f * n 
io“ K - . “ W £ 1 4 N s . oe oy 7) 
8 “ end N E 2 | 4 4 1 ‘ 85 2 >4 “4 : 
s 3 . “a * * 5 2 at 1 =~ d ge * 
8 a N 8 cs oF 5 1 . . 2 n 2 
e 5 * a . — 2 = 
- ; — “ 2 — — — 
n : un aoe esata. 
A * 5 : Sead * 6 
898 2 A 


{ 
11 


— 


Hi 
> 


2 


15 


1 
8 
i 
i 


2g 


_ 


Q 


88 
1 


* 


ö 


2 
5 


g 80 
24 
hid 


nF 
. 


f 
f 


i 


12 „ 
. 
5 $ » * 
* oe 
— 4 » 
8 1 4 
. m * * 


* 
F 


45 


dn 


tom House, Room 734 to inquire about work with the N.R.A. 


a“ 


i? 


i 
ber! 


* 


~ 
* 
= * 
N 2 
— TN 
— — 5 > = 
+. BES: o> of 
<€ . + 5 
4 . * 2 £ 
* 
a * 


8 
5 


- — 
— + — 

* . K 

. ~ 

| 112 1 

12 e rr 

: n N q 

be — ae 5 

Se 1 
ay 1 n 


: 
— 


1b 
Be 
3 


1 
1 
1 


FF 
1 
Riis 


Hf 


* 


aq 


i 


i 


115 
FE 


5 
ze 


11 


0 


f 
2 


: 
: 


getting?“ Without a doubt the gov- 
ernment has handed out billions of 
dollars to big business, and in refer- 


ef 


pie 
a 


18 
115 


0 
a 


s 
tj 


ii 


3 


ath 
z Z 
17 
ie 
it 


* 


. 
8 


af 
i 

28 

11 
f 


15 

f 
S F 

15 


1 
| 
i 


7 
5 
3 


8 
8 a 5 


> 
' — 
— — 
. — — 
uA N t= * N N 35 9 fia Pane * * 4 
at ra . Wen N 
D f o oe Cir > 
TE, gt c are oF: pore 
2 a 1 n * 22 7 2 A 
r 28s ATES, Ee GF Ty 


8 
BE 


— . 
r 
r . 


ern . 


— 


— 


8 


* 


b 


a 


* 


* 


5 


* 4 a heey. 2 5 
a Sp 


— 
2 
N 


ape 
8 


. 


f 
f 


“ae 
3 


i 
; 


sin 


LA 
~ 


: 
2 


ic 


eee 
i 


: 


Sx Pt por. re 
a) 1 
N * 


7 


: 
3 


ba ps 


i 
f 


i 


| 


4 
g 
. 
5 
| 
T 


2 


* 


1 e 


8 
BSR kRekEESEREESRERRREBR e 
F 


if 
i 


i 


8 
FREE 


kerze 


ii 
147 7% 
10 7 


. 
5 
ag 
i 


i 


ii 
a 


* 


1 


4 


1. 
5 


Isk 


i 
195 
i 
i 


Es 


1797 
+ 


i 


1 
rT 


7 
2 
15 
25 


* 
288 70 


ö 


li 
E 


1 
if 
A 
i 
leet 


irs 
su 
1 


f 
iff 
af 


i 
a8 
i 


: 


i 


| 


3 
: 
i 


F 
8 


i 
it 


| 
| 


g 


71 
8 


oe 


BEE 
. 


8 
75 75 


it Ebesusussess 


‘ 


~~ 


we 


a! 


ne 1190 


Nn. be f e A e ee aE Sa * 
Ee e 
; S . mm Sy es PA 7 18 f K. 12 
i E 17 57 5725 441 it 5 a 15 ee Es 11 W E 89 11 ei be 1 = 1 = 3 l 0 20 pi 
| “lh bet Lees ites 1 i e l ie LR Sn 1 1 2114 Ae 
ial e fal Mie i = 1 8 i 28714 J 
„ II e, eee, be % f e ii | 
a e e e eee 
38 1 23 = 221 1111 eae tile 1 i i Sia Aube & 1 = gree ete l||||/|S QB pares be 
HE 811338 22, TRTIMG LENT Hee TLE Ge Li eT et Rodd RE Ra Re Pd eg Fo 
ef gine itll ee: Fm i e e eee 11 
* THEE iy — 3 5 4147 IF 1 1 HH || 1 2 i 751 Es 1 Fi 5 125 
— 3352321 aa E Wee ite THRE Es ffs i Feiv i i 
JJC gai aeaiees 2847 ([ ] § 0 | A Gh; FOG 4 een 
22 1 1 ui 7 1 a 5 a Lt 1 jal eis 1 . i : : 1 Th f 
| bie “3 Sede 1857 22755 35 4 454 „l.. , 5 2 4 „ a |g oe 
S 1 100 e a l 1 1 ha Ea rae 
) 3 53 1 3425 23 72 np > : 285 222 s 1 51 * 5 2 8 8 * 4 45 117 1 41 32 . tiby ils 1 
8 222755 2573 23 HR 15 is fil Ay +: 7 2175 5 i i i 
| 8 BS ee ir e e biel vibe: 1 wel e a if ait 11 H 
& 1 ete a el 
a — i 3 1 2 oe pe. - mas ae a | : veep 127 8 ’ | 5 ; 2 al + 
at Hees og 15 1% „ 7 J rat 1 byl Kae 11 i 17 
|| 2 8 1 10 1111 4 . 10 1 1 ace 1 11 iil 10 
at tied 3 intitle HH een 1 1 ee ee 
ei 4 ue pe red ' : * 
4 | — 83 2 self Sh ae < ant i 3 a iu i i fl 
1 A n 5 e tates i dl fap e 
88 | 7 iy at 1 11 tf i AE. * 2 10 
5 12 Re “ae, 5 1 a. ) 33 221 g 248 333 15 5 5 bi iil 8 7 
ö b | : 2 85 Tisai ES Ee a eee See ie ee : f 112 : 1 tal i 2 , eh dal in 1 1 
45 IS f i RPE ate ‘if r ee 
4 lp 335 | ile 7 e a i ili te e ae a a 
IE 2s 18 f 43 ip „ 1s 1211 to 0 
J 1725 : 13 = 2 aie Bs . e! ie 1 et te 1 g a ih 10 1 a 1127 mur i 
Sh ae ee | i> Ae ae 5 i 2732 5 a cp 95 
pie Ee | aa il 10 b a e bt i 1 1 
| * i i f f 1010 
5 1 Habs e He Al Hine! 125 l hw i il e i Hae! i 5 1111 i 


* 4 
7 
1 * 
ms Ra x 
4 " . 
n ~ me 
1 ** 
7 5 4 i 
on ae * 
* 
2 — 
— — 75 << “ 
a * 
4, > ; 
4 


Ea 
post‘ 


12445 


iin 


ig le OE N 


— 


ie 1 id ies 1 iit: 12335 mii 217231 Ali Fig 1201 F LOL teeth Mare . ite 
; : , 2274 4 17 : : 
here fis 1 0 AF i | 1100 11 % de 1 ee e 1 h bh a 
11 11 1 0 11 11 ip 15 1483 1 tee ii 0 1 i 11 
pei ee 2? ene ie eel 10 N 10 i 10 5 e e le 
aap a is 8 5 8 1101 11115 ait? : ig 17812 af 1 N qe 1 att 
111515 . Filet Hid din ee ia its i bis 7210 


* 2 7 f ow A 
* * 3 € * 4 * N 
4 * 5 . 1 
* * — 1 2 7 8 * 
- * + x 4 * . 8 x 1 . 
a * ae * 4 * 4 a 7 9 t. 
~ 1 1 ~ : 2 ns 7 ‘ * * * 1 Pee 3 i 
Loe) 2 *. ä = on 4 * * * * 
ag * 4 * . 3 + - 
‘ J . 7 beta > 2 2 . “tod 
* rs 1 * A , * 
* * 7 N — * * 
* * 7 % *. 2 „ 
4 ö 1 oa . = * — 8 * 0 a 
* oe 2 5 3 ¥ . — e as . * ~ 
r 2 * 2 * 1 a 3 ? 
eh 3 7 4 15 , 8 
4 J ' 5 * ‘ * 7 0 * > 7 0 
2 * 4 bh * . . * 2 * 5 * 1 
a Ya > . - “~ 6 ; 3 oe -& * * 5 * 
2 * * * 2 A — Hw - N 
* a; a „ 5 — » ors 2 
fe 4 „ A 1 J » i * — 9 — 8 
** N ’ » N ¥ + ys 8 — 
eX 4 eg 8 ** 7 4 0 ‘ 
Foren . * . | 8 J 0 
8 we * ’ — * ‘ 4 
4 * a, ~~ a ¢ Spe * 
J ge. 15 1 a - i N 
= . 1 4 7 = * 10 = 
“a ie „ * : sa 5 32 
“4 . 8 7 i ~” ‘ 4 - 4 
N 3 * 
ue. 2 b. 


3s 
- 
e * « 
1 A. 5 a : 5 — 8 
oe ies N 1 1 8 ; Pa ee 
i eae - coe 0 =, 8 7 
2 rr 4 n 8 2 0 
3 8 r ! 7 7 * ee : - p 
7 1 - 2 1 a a 5 1 : * * 9 ‘ * be ’ 1 
A 7 2 4 — 9 r 4 . 5 * 7 f Ain - 
. . — 8 ug > — 1 4 8 1 
. . J . 2 3 ll . ~ 
. 8 " oe” * ö 7 2 2 21 8 * a. 
. | 1 * rey ot * 5 2 2 A *. 1 
‘ ee © 8 n +> N — > « . : ? 
i “ 4 1 0 > 4 ’ ma — 
— ‘ 5 . Z * 2 5 
r * * 55 * * 72 
* fe * 2 i 8 
+ si 7 * gi: * . 
5 =. le fs 7 N * 8 
8 2 — * — 
* Aa se . * ~ —— 1 
. * md 2 ‘ - * § , 
a : 5 5 * 
* 
* * 
sey - an ° ¥ tn . 
„ : —_ ~ ö ‘ ; 4 
_ bee — * — x 1 5 
8 . nf. * 95 * i - 
oo: t » 
2 7 oo 7 


85 5 
11 a) Md 3 


ba 1 I Aa 3p 1 50 i 0 100 f 


155 E 23 
e Baie 
i * EF, 3 i 

1 15 725 


8. 
27705 4411; 1 
n Hts 


F mag, the en 
. 


ad iy 115 


ä — — — — 


—— 927 — TE 


Suey : * 

„ 7 ‘ 
8 we cad See : td ’ 
3 3 


. 1 ‘ ; 
2 7 * * 


188 
K 
3 
4 


Published by the Comprodatiy Publishing Co., me., daily except Sunday, at % K 
18th St, New York City, N. T. Telephone ALgontuin 4-7955. Cable “DATWORK. 
Address and mall chacks to the Dally Worker, 50 k. 13th St.. New York, &. 


- 


5 r ͤ e!!! 


— — 


HUGE THRONG. OF HAVANA! 
WORKERS GATHER TO DEFY 
U.S. GOVT INTERVENTION, 


Led be Communists, Demand Withdrawal of 
Naval Fleet; Chicago Workers Protest 
As Marines Land 


* 


. 


Chinese Waiters in 
Chicago Win Strike 
and Form Own Union 


CHICAGO, Sept. 28. — Chinese 
waiters in a Chinese restaurant at 
the Century of Progress here went 
on strike against the firing of older 
workers and within two hours won , 
not only the reinstatement of the 
workers threatened with discharge 


f 


~ 
— 
~ . 7 


Wid eee le . | 


iy ia * 0 


3 ö 
ee ee. 
. * Pd 


' 8 
. 


boo oe 


a on sone ee but an increase in pay of 50 per | 3 a | 
tion of the Soviet on as cent. —— 1 ö N a Bre 
ts exams Torte way Ot Of GWM e ee ee u , Workers Thrive in II. S. S. R., Brewer in U. 8. S. R. 
misery under the yoke of Wall street mation of a union affiliated with or ers | ve In „D.. A., . i 2 
imperialism, © maten AS Bee. eee eee ritis ge orl : roup a Seeks U. S. Brothers 
eee British Workers’ G Finds 
party of United States marines from ° . ee BO ae 1 
lutionary Cuban workers, who seized T 100 Leaders Have Been Misleading Them N 3 
the artes ne on Proletarian Dictatorshi tna rere J Lonin plese ert 
The marines landed, according to + Toletarian Orship J. Toain, Ger 
ine e e e, Storm Disaster — ame 28 
1 salle — LENINGRAD, Sept. 26 (By Mail, delayed).—With a No. it, d UBS 1 
rines were landing. No clashes have : Th ee h totally changed outlook, and with the greatest enthusiasm, for 2 e 2 e 
14 been reported as yet. — River Rages TOUS" | the achievements of the workers in the Soviet Union, a delega-| tom the village Mechalovka, State 
. Thousands of workers are expected Center of the City as tion of 15 menibers of the British ent Labor Party 1 9 * 
‘ to 27 at : “embs L since World 
4 Wall in z man hot ta the CH. Boats Rescue Injured d Labor Party-embarked, today’ for London after traveling | Canada was, the last country from 
71 cago délegates to the Anti-War Con- --— W Soviet Union. f 
ji gress in New York, Sept. MEXICO CITY, Sept. 26.—The hur- N 
ie to oil town, Sunday night, has turned 
| Lindbergh Studies 2 zo: 
b 1 bles. All the the 
* A 0 ti 4 „„ 
80 ve . 
viet Via ion 9 the N Mexican National Telegraph 
* b Agency reported J. ae 
eee | facing almost insurmountable handi- pt. 29th As 
— . — the Te War Danger Grows 
; area. 
“First Country Where | Panuco 2 is ge gag 2 Se ix 
Man Can Wander Free- n atte only n tt | ate an ae toe ae 
? ; getting about. Floating debris and 
ly,” Says Aviator {gettin telegraph poles make all pro-| States and Great. Britain was 
MOSCOW, Sept. 26—Col. Charles Frese “#ngerous. ee ee — 
80 a — F e Daag mehr ng Roosevelt that there be no de- 
Union today in an interview with Most of the victims are still buried | jay whatever in the nage 
sing : ' build- 0 
country where a man wander |ings with the waters of the raging| N building program under the 
freely without dodging reporters and hood swirling above them, and only . —— 5 
cameramen, a game which becomes 52 bodies have been recovered so far. The Del ee ee 
tiresome after the first Scores of injured have been evacu- lomatic channels, had requested 
few years of it.” ated already on rowboats. program be delayed because Brit- 
Discussing the immediate prospects ication with the out- ih government said it regard 
for regular plane service across the sae world has been rees-| this move as an arms rate which 
Atlantic, Lindbergh said that much tablished, with direct communication | Would require similar action on the 
exploratory work must be done be- with Brownsville, Texas, maintained Patt of England. moc the 
o ee Tee meene. } The ä s to i 
polar route from the United States . 1 inted dt at the time in| wil submit to th ‘ih front of the consulate, wi 
2 ae * — Springfield Jobless tconions thas thin aan he eaamaaind pot the Communist 1 signs announcing the . 
route at present Group Elects Four to as preparation for war in. the Paotfie | i008. ¢ hip of tie -working | the freedom of the Reichstag fire de- 
. Lindbergh and his wife will remain} Anti-War Congress cerned in auch a war. "| Class or the necessity for the revolu- tendapte. Police took an hour an 
Mound guilty of disorderly con- in Moscow until Friday, sight-seeing : : tioriafy seizure of state a half to saw them free. 
r . .:.. eg sna | Caen aeeri Nad ee 
e is promising to build a tem- The workers of Moscow have taken | SPringfield Unemployed League, con- | iowed by the speeded-up war program gf the I. I. P. rank and file and 100 wortbes gathered — 
New, York. A Russian has in- the note flyer to their heart. Wnen Wolled by the Socialist Party, has ie sharpening the struggle between| lower party functionaries for afl. | °° — — 
s train that ball-| Lindbergh and his wife attended the | cltcted, four delegates to the Anti-| these two powers for markets and|ation with the Communist Interna. | consist, Besides the crowds of pass- 
a a 3 — ied * gn an e attended the War Congress, to be held in New : plunder to the point whave tonal a ersby. 
nt spheres. O. as PP oscow Opera last night, a worker York, Sept. 29. The League has an 338 - the oa ; ° 8 i] , went up to the 
| @ promising career, says the stood up in a box and shouted “Hur- enrolled membership of 1,000 work- ’ : : German corisul ga and presented de- 
Went of Life Buoy Soap. rah for Lindbergh!” The entire ers. ° <9 y dg ter an end to Hitler's terror 
be’ eg. audience rose and applauded the air-| The Unemployed League has pre- This latest. war move, combined es- ing prepared. With only a few days and for the freedém of the Reich- 
NAlfonso, the ex-King of Spain, has rae veg space to details of his 20 percent in cash relief for the un-|the League of Nations that war have not yet elected delegates are was forced to accept. 
» his son who married a beau- licht from Leningrad yesterday. employed which will be presented to | hovers over Europe,’ comes on the eve | urged to do so immediate). alia 
Suban senorita and * the Board of Welfare this week. of the opening of the Anti-War Con- F Three police, armed with 
“might have been worse, some of Nazis Issue Decree “If this demand is refused the | ress in New York, Sept. 29. Help improve the “Daily Worker.” | machine 8 =* of 3 
Ae the Prince of Wales, go in a : 0 League will hold a protest meeting at This united front congress will lay send in your suggestions and criticism! | police a 7 
“embroidering. to imprison Radio <n High School on Friday —— — — — = Let ws know what rey ty ane — ent e eee 
* * — * 2 N which pidly ~ | your shop, think about Daily. ; 
Brain. Trest. Program Listeners } : : 
f gl — y Ainge is, who's — ‘ 5 N e 5 ome 
n the Brain Trust? FRANKFURT-AM-MAIN—If yoy . 
sey Baruch is called the unoffi-| listen in to a Moscow program, via fer G g R le h R ; hs | 
is called es hs listen in to & Moscow program, ‘vi aptain Goering's Role in the Reichstag Fire 
— ET eas Leni — 
4 -e , camps” o r. 2. ie. A 7 <= * 
e brains behind the BT?) . police decree issued eee, ene High Nazi Offieial Is Proven Drug Addiet; . e man is play- 
82 . . . presc prisonmen a con- 1 1 4 «4 
Pink Shirts. centration camp for Persons who lis-| orandum, the execution of the Nasi : 


‘the Daily News, the fashion tened im on Communist propaganda 
tor men has the following im- 


advice: “One of the most 


2 3 : 4 
Shown to Be Organizer of Fire 

plan for the Reichstag was 4 oy te 

broadcast from Moscow. The decree | put in the hands of Capt. Herman 

made reference particularly to per- Wilhelm Goering, Speaker of the 

sons who invited guests into their Reichstag, Premier of Prussia and 

home to hear the program from head of the Prussian Police. 


| Moscow. Goering who picked the small band 
of high Nazi officials, led by Lieut. 


> is 

olor schemes than a pink shirt. 

been worn by too many be- — ͤ — 

n m Akron, O., Comrade, 
ng e man e . ’ 2 | 

hair and eyes.” But ri; Giampietri Carmine, 

couldn't make a steel worker 


te of lite anon ween brown | Gets Red Funeral 
y prefers red to pink. | — — 


. 
St. Paul. | 
is supposed to be Amer- 
dest city, but I am sure that 
still take their profit there, 
wkers stand in breadlines. 
Bite Where? , 
e said that the average annual 
of the of a life in- 


during 

— noon of that fateful February 27, and 
who escaped through under- 
ground tunnel to Goering’s residence 
after having applied the torch to the 
AKRON, O.—A Red Funeral was Reichstag building. Only after the 
given Giampietri Carmine, 34, who Reichstag fire did the attention of 
died at City Hospital recently, after the whole world focus on this war 
the brutal City Clinic refused to give | aviator, who was reputed to be the 
“strong man” of the Nazi regime. 


His biographers tell us that he was 
a noted “ace” during the World War. 


Communist 
E of Goering’s former aviator 


one of the most active in the organ- 
gation of the Rubber Workers Union. 
He was unmarried. the 
Carmine lay in state 

hundreds of 


„Sept. 26—Pifteen 
and twelve injured 


services. 

hundred Negro and 
workers marched to Mount 
Cemetery where he was buried. 


rs and the bodies of 


white 
Hope 


— 


FE 
BEE 
17 
af 


i 
4 
i 
5 


3 
8 
4 


f 
: 


8 


| 
: 


f 
f 
f 


3 


: 


F 


ö 
i 


ö 
0 


721 


ist 
i 
F 
1 


——ů 


Jobless Faced With 


9. 5 


m I. 0 


ae 
* 
* 
& 
* 
* 


7 


New Registration Trick 
Used to Cut Aid 
from Miners 
(By a Worker Correspondent) 
Pa.— Recently all 
the unemployed and part time em- 
ployed in W mn County were 
—::. ty gs 
registration was local 
checks, c 
. hd ; 
that 3 cut in 
a 
prayed gg es ag. onde Nagra 
were not enough to do this 
The new system of relief went into 
effect last week, According to the 
information we could gather, 42 fa- 
mMies in this township were cut off 
from relief the first week. This week 
66 families were cut off. The old 
local relief board is still writing the 
relief checks. Their answer to every 
one cut off is either that it was 
through a mistake or that they don’t 
know the reason. 
Other families received partial cuts. 
Those receiving 5.00 a week for seven 
in the family got only $450. Some 
of the families were banded together 
and now two families living in a dou- 
ble house are given one check, 
all. Up to now a 
$1.50. Now 
in one house are banded 
milly.“ This 
lowing reports: 
tagether 
men live 
$3.50. 
registration 
now must 
“family” to eat 
to live 
It is 
against 
the old system 
more relief. 


Tragic Winter, Is 


Welfare Warning | 


Ask City for Almost 50 


Percent Relief Rise; 
Buro Drops More 


1 
af 


| 


: 
: 
i 


5 
lie 


17880 
fi 
. 

i 


2 


1 


111 ff 
it 


> 


| 


. * 
x ee : 


a 


* 
— * 
- 2 „ 
1 * 

2 
* 1 1 
ae . 

— 0 2 

re * 


Il 


858883 
i 


: 


1271 11 
1 0 1 


oT. 6, 


7, 8 


— 1 


ADMISSION 
Friday and Sunday. — 350 
Saturda 40 

Lit. Fund.. . oe 


— 


Total for Sat. = 50 


7 
— 


E VERY NIGHT 
To the Tune of | 
VERNON ANDRADE’S 


ORCHESTRA _ 


— — — 


NATIONAL PRESS BAZAAR 


. 


; +. : 8 * 
> . 
* N N 
ae : — 
» we 
> 


DANCING 


8 
pas Fad re 
1 


n * 
e 
* : 


* * * 2 5 
Nn 
eee 
25 N 5 N ay 
eS 
* * 


N F 


eg 


22 — >: 7 


— ——